Grammy-nominated guitarist and singer Michael Daves (Chris Thile & Michael Daves, Tony Trischka) performs music from his critically-acclaimed double album Orchids and Violence (2016, Nonesuch Records). This special show presented by The Bluegrass Situation showcases Daves first in a solo electric set, followed by a screening of Jason Zucker’s documentary on the making of the album, and culminating in a full-band bluegrass set featuring progressive banjo legend Trischka, sibling fiddlers Alex & Tatiana Hargreaves, and special guests.

Orchids and Violence’s two discs comprise identical track listings of mostly traditional bluegrass songs: the first features straightforward interpretations of the songs and was recorded live to tape in a 19th-century church with a stellar band of roots-music innovators; the second disc, recorded mostly by Daves in his Brooklyn studio, includes drums, and electric bass and guitars, and takes a raw, experimental rock approach to the same primarily old-time material. “The identical track listing makes for a good comparison study,” says the New York Times music critic Nate Chinen in his review, “and to his credit, it can be hard to pick which version of a tune is best.” At National Sawdust, Daves and his two distinct musical formats will play the songs from the albums done in their contrasting interpretations.

Michael Daves

Born in Atlanta, Georgia, Michael Daves grew up playing bluegrass in the grand old tradition of staying up late & singing loud. Although he’s since moved north, the Southern roots permeate his music, however traditional or experimental. Heralded as “a leading light of the New York bluegrass scene” by the New York Times, Daves has garnered attention for his work with Chris Thile, Steve Martin, Tony Trischka, and others in addition to his solo performances.

Daves’ most recent project is a two-album set, Orchids and Violence, released February 2016 on Nonesuch Records. Both discs are produced by Daves and have identical track listing of mostly traditional bluegrass songs. The first features straightforward interpretations of them and was recorded live to tape in a 19th-century church by Daves and a band of roots-music innovators: bassist Mike Bub, violinist Brittany Haas, mandolinist Sarah Jarosz, and banjo player and Punch Brother Noam Pikelny. The second disc was recorded in Daves’s home studio and includes bass, drums, and electric guitar, mostly played by Daves, and takes a raw, experimental rock approach to the same old-time material. “The identical track listing makes for a good comparison study,” says the New York Times music critic Nate Chinen in his review, “and to his credit, it can be hard to pick which version of a tune is best.”

Daves previously recorded bluegrass standards on Sleep with One Eye Open, his Nonesuch debut, a duo session with mandolinist Chris Thile (Punch Brothers, Nickel Creek) that earned the pair a 2011 Grammy nomination.

Although he is best known as a roots musician, Daves gravitated toward experimental music and jazz while studying at Hampshire College in Massachusetts. Relocating to Brooklyn more than a decade ago, he began to crave the social interaction and musical challenges of bluegrass: “In Western Massachusetts, I was mostly doing jazz. By the time I moved to New York, I was ready to leave that behind, get back to my personal roots in bluegrass music. There were good jam sessions in New York and I was excited to reenter a regular jamming culture in the city. And I was getting back into rock music, too. The Brooklyn scene in 2003 and 2004 was pretty fertile. There was a lot of great, kind of raw, experimental rock music happening at that time, drawing me in, scratching an itch.”

Since 2006 Daves has maintained a weekly residency on Tuesday nights at The Rockwood Music Hall in Manhattan where he continues to draw a devout following, and uses the informal setting to showcase special guest appearances with a who’s who of bluegrass musicians including Noam Pikelny, Chris Eldridge, Sarah Jarosz, and Aoife O’Donovan. He is also an in-demand teacher and noted booster of NYC’s thriving bluegrass music community.